My progress / transition seems to have gone a little more than full circle as I have migrated back to the idea of a hammock.

The Grand Trunk hammock will be paired with a bug net for summer use and a yet to be built MYOG double layer hammock will be added to the system for winter use. Also being considered as another MYOG project is a winter hammock tarp with catenary curves and doors.

Newton is back y'all! It's a Southern thing like deaux. Just ask B.G. ;-) ROTFLMAO

There is 1 tent, 3 hammocks, 4 tarps and 1 bivy left to go in your Nifty sequence. ;-)

As for the road that lies ahead, be willing to explore the options. Experience is the best teacher but asking questions and listening to the answers can shorten the road measurably.

Sometimes carrying a few more ounces is worth it if it gives you a better and more restful night's sleep.

My progress through this transition has included heavy packs, lighter packs and extremely lightweight packs. Some were bought, some were MYOG and some were sold on Gear Swap.

I've had alcohol stoves, canister stoves and solid fuel tablet stoves. These too included those that were purchased and those that were made. Yes some of these also left my gear closet by virtue of Gear Swap.

Titanium and aluminum cookware of all sorts has graced and left my pack and gone up for sale.

Pads, I've had pads. Closed cell foam and self inflating. Some were blue, some were green, some were charcoal grey and some were red and grey nylon and foam. One was sold and others were pieced out for MYOG projects. My soon to be built double layer hammock will make use of one of my remaining pads as cold weather "bottom" insulation. ;-)

Sleeping bags and top quilts have been bought, made and given away.

Hats and clothes have come and gone. Nalgene bottles and reservoirs have been replaced by reclaimed sports drink bottles.

Pack weight and volume must be considered but ultimately it's the performance of the gear that makes it worth carrying.

This thread started out talking about my transition from one type of shelter to another. One two week trip I neither pitched a tent or hung a hammock. I slept each evening in one of the AT's many shelters. My unused tent was simply unnecessary weight.

I'm a confessed gear head. I enjoy hiking, buying gear, making gear and talking about gear. It isn't really clear to me which one I enjoy doing more. :-0

I knew a gal who was the exact opposite of a gear head. She hated to make her own gear. In fact, she hated to buy gear. She did not want to store it. Instead, she borrowed and rented gear for everything.

On her first year of cross country skiing, she went almost every weekend for the entire season, yet she owned no ski gear.

She used to go backpacking and do it all with maybe one or two pieces rented, and the rest was all borrowed gear. She was the only backpacker that I ever knew who would go to a store to try to rent a water bottle. I kid you not.

I feel like I care more about my gear when I'm not using it. I think some times I educate myself about or by gear when I'm at work, as the bumper sticker reads "I'd Rather Be Fishing" or hiking, or skiing, the list goes on. When I am in the field, by a lake, or on a mountain, I generally care far more about the fish in the water, the mountains in view, or the sights and sounds of nature. I put up my tent, but I don't go in and out of it, or test its features. These things that matter so much when I'd rather be hiking, somehow become incidental, or beyond seconds to the tasks at hand.

In some ways I like Bob's ski girl. She loves skiing. she doesn't want to get burdened down with the nerdy side of weight, dimensions, or who uses what. She gets out and does it. I'm thinking renting all of your gear COULD be cheaper than the long and often circuitous paths like Newton's or mine. I've gone dome, small light TNF tents of many varieties, single wall tents, tarps, hybrid all-in-one designs, ponchos, etc. some have lasted a trip, some years. But my memories of my trips don't really include the bag or the shelter I used - of course freezing or soaking wet, I'm more likely to remember that, but that's still just nature.

The "nature" of the Interesting Digression ;-)
on 02/03/2014 04:04:01 MST

Brian,

" But my memories of my trips don't really include the bag or the shelter I used - of course freezing or soaking wet, I'm more likely to remember that, but that's still just nature".

Nature is a very interesting word and term.

We go out into the field to play in nature with all of our gear thinking that we are prepared. In fact while we are in the field it is nature that plays with us.

While I'm on a hiking trip the beauty of nature always amazes me. But nature's little surprises always seems to test my good nature. ;-)

When I first started hiking I made all of the wrong moves and choices that a noob could make in gear and preparation choices. Two days into my first trip and I heard my hiking partner say, "We're not having any fun any more, are we?" We bailed. ;-?

Why did I even think of trying it again?

I'm a Retro Guy who likes to fix or make things.

I felt defeated and stupid. It's in my "nature" to fix or replace broken or useless things. I needed to fix me and replace whatever gear that was too heavy or proved inadequate. Also I wanted to fix and or replace my memory of that trip with a good one.

The beauty of nature can be endless vistas, peaceful animals, clear star filled nights and clean free flowing streams. It can also be the desire to become or perform better that I have found is in my "nature".

Progress can be made through transitions if we let ourselves listen to and learn from nature in all of its forms. ;-)